“Do you think Dr. Sutsoff currently could pose a risk to the security of the United States and other nations?”
Winfield hesitated.
“Sir, your response? Do you think Dr. Sutsoff currently could pose a risk to the security of the United States and other nations?”
Winfield swallowed.
“Yes.”
The exam continued with similar questions asked different ways for nearly an hour before it ended. Winfield was given a few old copies of Newsweek and Time and left alone in the room. Thirty minutes later he was taken to another room where he saw three men his age.
They were familiar.
“Foster?” One of them stood. “We figured they’d grab you, too.”
It took a few seconds before he recognized what time had done to Andrew Tolkman, Lester Weeks and Phil Kenyon, his old team from Project Crucible.
“Hello. Good to see you.” Winfield touched each of them on the shoulder then glanced around. “Although, not ideal circumstances.”
“They can’t find Gretchen,” Tolkman said.
“No one can,” Kenyon said. “I told them she’s the one they need.”
A door opened and a man in his forties, wearing jeans and a golf shirt, entered and handed each of them a slim file folder.
“Gentlemen, my name is Powell, Army Intel. Biochem. We have little time. As you may have gathered, this concerns your work on Project Crucible. In a nutshell, we think some of your classified work is being applied to launch a strike. In fact, it may already be under way.”
Kenyon muttered a curse.
“No one else is better qualified to help us at this stage than you. I’ll give you time to read the material, then we’ll suit you up to work with our people on the sample we have in the lab. We hope you can tell us what we’re up against.”
The file contained information on the deceased cruise-line passenger from Indiana, based on reports provided by the Broward County M.E., the CDC and the army’s experts. The aging scientists read it all carefully.
“How is it possible?” Andrew Tolkman whispered more to himself than to the others as Powell returned.
“Gentlemen,” Powell said, holding the door. “We’ll head to the lab.”
Cutting across the compound to the lab, he led the scientists through several secure doors to areas flagged with signs warning of danger. They passed through a series of sealed rooms before coming to a changeroom with lockers and other lab staff. The lab staff helped the men into blue containment suits, taping their socks and wrists after they tugged on latex gloves.
Next they entered a sealed chamber that featured a disinfectant shower. After they each showered with their suits on, they put on rubber boots and another set of heavy rubber gloves and proceeded down a corridor where they each reached for a hose from the ceiling and connected it to their suits.
They then passed through another air lock, waiting until it was safe to enter the lab where a team of army scientists was at work. The Crucible experts joined their teams, analyzing, processing and running tests on the tissue samples from the cruise-ship victim. Each team worked on different aspects of the sample. During this time, Powell remained in a remote room watching the work on closed-circuit TV while communicating with them.
“What do you think?” Powell asked.
“It is definitely evocative of the work we did on Crucible,” Winfield said into his radio-intercom.
“You mean the work Gretchen did,” Kenyon added.
After some three hours, the scientists exited the lab, moving carefully through the various chambers. They each stayed in their suits and took another decontamination shower before moving along to the locker room where they were helped out of their suits.
Powell was waiting for the four men again in the same room where he had originally briefed them.
“Your assessment?”
Winfield looked at his colleagues.
“We would not have believed it had we not seen it,” he said. “Theoretically, it should be impossible.”
“What do you mean?”
“It’s definitely a manufactured agent,” Winfield said. “It’s totally new and has characteristics of Ebola, Marburg and anthrax. We can’t really identify it. But there’s more.”
“More?”
“Its foundation is in File 91 and some of the other agents developed by some enemy states. But we cannot fully understand the delivery system, the control system and how it seems to be manipulated.”
“I’m not sure I follow you.”
“It’s extremely sophisticated. I don’t think we can defend against it.”
“What about an antidote or vaccine?”
“Well, while it encompasses a manufactured lethal agent, it’s less characteristic of a virus, more like a controllable agent. Its engineering is very advanced.”
“Isn’t there anything we can do?”
“It’s like a weapon with no off switch. I don’t think there’s much we can do to stop it.”
61
Paradise Island, Bahamas
As their cab from the airport climbed the bridge over the crystal water of Nassau Harbor, Emma looked at the hotels rising from the island.
“It’s funny,” she told Gannon. “I was a travel writer before I became a teacher, and I have been to a lot of places but never here. Joe and I were planning a trip to the Bahamas. We were going to bring Tyler but now, to come here as a widow, wondering if my baby’s alive…” Emma reached under her sunglasses and touched the corner of her eye. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be,” Gannon said. “We need to know the truth.”
Gannon paid the driver after they arrived at the massive main building of the Grand Blue Tortoise Resort. Tourists, guests and staff crowded the lobby, which was as chaotic as an airport terminal. Live parrots cawed in a four-story aviary and calypso music filled the air. The reservation for two rooms next to each other was under Gannon’s name. He used the WPA’s credit card.
“Are there any messages?” Gannon asked as he collected their keys.
The clerk consulted the computer.
“No, sir.”
“I’m looking for my friend Robert Lancer-he should be registered here.”
The clerk checked.
“Yes, room 2322 Blue Reef Tower D. That’s the next building west from you, sir. Do you wish to send Mr. Lancer a message?”
“Yes, tell him I’ve arrived and to please call my room.”
When Gannon got to his room there was still no message from Lancer. He set up his laptop and sent Lancer an e-mail telling him that he’d arrived at the hotel and was standing by. Then he sent a text message.
No response.
Gannon called the WPA’s Nassau Bureau. Prior to his Bahamas assignment, the Nassau chief had run the Amsterdam Bureau.
“WPA, Peter DeGroote.”
“Jack Gannon. I just arrived.”
“Ah, yes, Jack. New York advised us to expect your call. We’ll support you in every way possible. I trust you had a good flight?”